Contrasting journeys, similar delight

Big-spending Paris Saint-Germain ended an 18-year wait to reach the Champions League quarterfinals on Wednesday while two-time winners Juventus made the last-eight for the first time in seven years.

PSG, with David Beckham left on the bench, drew 1-1 at home to Spanish side Valencia at the Parc des Princes which allowed them to progress 3-2 on aggregate.They had to survive something of a scare, however, with Brazilian attacking midfielder Jonas putting the visitors in front on the night 10 minutes into the second half.

At easeBut PSG settled their nerves when Ezequiel Lavezzi, who had also scored at the Mestalla in the first leg, levelled in the 66th minute and PSG held out to secure their place in the last eight for the first time since the 1995 season.In Turin, Juventus, the champions in 1985 and 1996, cruised into the quarter-finals with a 2-0 win over Glasgow Celtic for an impressive 5-0 aggregate scoreline.

Double trouble Strikes in either half from Alessandro Matri and Fabio Quaglirella earned Juventus the win, ending all hopes of the "minor miracle" which Celtic manager Neil Lennon had deemed necessary on the eve of the tie.

"It may have looked easy, but if we had conceded a goal, then you know how things can turn around, you start to worry," said Matri.

Game onLennon accepted that the Italian challenge was a step too far but praised his side for a memorable campaign which had included a famous group stage win over Barcelona."On the night, was it a fair result. Class tells in the end," said Lennon.

Juve were ahead after 24 minutes when Federico Peluso robbed Celtic striker Gary Hooper and fed Quagliarella to the left of goal. When Fraser Forster failed to hold the Italian's shot, Matri ran in to sweep the ball home.

Lennon replaced right-back Adam Matthews with Efe Ambrose — blamed for two of Juve's first leg goals — at half-time, but it was Juve who moved up a gear. When Juve's second goal came, it exposed Celtic's defence all too easily.